Soviet fantasy B-movie, worth to check out at least as a curiosity
28 October 2011
I came across this film on TV accidentally and being born in USSR it brought back some sentimental memories, mostly because it is based on Kir Bulichev's story - this author used to be published in almost every soviet youth magazine - so this made me feel like 12 again Don't get me wrong - it is quite bad, it was never a hit, and it looked pretty outdated already when it came out at the end of the soviet era. At the time, not only the audience but even the directors were totally mesmerized by the B and C level American trash films - mostly because were so different from everything we saw before that. So this film is clearly an attempt to emulate those foreign films: not even the original Star Wars, Predator or Conan but their cheap imitations. In less than a year my home country quit the USRR in the midst of wars and economic collapse and relations with Russians have been getting worse ever since. So this is a fantasy film (I would not dear to call it a science fiction) from the time and the country that now only remains in the memories and fiction and may be that is why I appreciate it more than it deserves as it gives my this sad memories of the world that doesn't exist anymore.

The actors playing the main parts (except Karachentsov who seems to be out of place here) were mostly the young generation that were not yet that popular in non-Russian republics (unlike the older generation that is still loved and admired) even though Zhigunov was star of the Russian knockoff of 3 musketeers ("Gardemarini" series) and Pevtsov (the villain in this movie) went on to become the major heartthrob of Russian cinema over the next decade, none of them are appealing enough to hold the entire film, and director's decision to cast own wife as a female lead did not help - if both hero and antagonist are trying hard to be Schwarzeneggers (Pevtsov comes close - with over the top ridiculous grimaces), the leading lady is obviously really poor man's take on every single "Tanya Roberts wearing fur bikini" character from American B movies. The special effects are really lame, not even the "American B movie" lame but rather a "Godzilla wanna-be" lame. And one can feel that it was too obviously aiming at young audience - it is felt in dialogs, and in many scenes, like in a sequence that has a promise and look of a vintage German porn the female lead takes shower in the waterfall, but alas, doesn't even take of her Stone Age bikini. The film is also gives an interesting alternative of the future where the an astronauts are wearing only soviet red flag - badges - I suppose communism was meant to survive into XXX century.

The funniest part for the Russian speaker comes when the a soviet astronaut of the future and a savage princess talk with an obvious Russian yuppie accents and seem to be almost embarrassed to be doing all this adolescent ninja staff.

On a positive note however, even with all of this criticism, the film has more heart and plot than most of its foreign sources of inspiration. It is pretty interesting, and pretty fun, even though in a masterpiece theater kind of way.
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